General Discussion
Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsWe Live in a Rage-ocracy, Not a Democracy
...
The GOP is excellent, of course, at turning its voters into people who never, ever move on on a wide range of issues: guns, abortion, tax increases, and so on. On the subject of tax increases (and economic policies in general), I think Kevin Drum is basically correct when he takes a jaundiced view of that new Pew poll. It's true that the poll says
...
I wouldn't say the problem is that "support drops dramatically" for actual remedies -- people support a lot of progressive remedies. But there just isn't enough outrage to get them passed. There is, however, plenty of outrage (ginned up by the right-wing noise machine) in favor of not doing these things -- and that simply trumps the opinion of progressive-leaning majority on these issues.
Minority rage wins every time.
http://www.boomantribune.com/story/2011/12/15/172651/23
Oconnor4Congress
(19 posts)Agreed. Our culture is getting to be irrational and I fear how this may trickle down into politics.
Scuba
(53,475 posts)BeHereNow
(17,162 posts)BHN
BeHereNow
(17,162 posts)Most of the people in the room were stunned by
ignorance of a certain woman who was raging against
the fact that her daughter was being asked to read
"The Color Purple."
Her rage controlled the room, for a short time
and I actually thought the group was going to go along
with her demand that the book be removed from the
reading list.
Fortunately, rational people prevailed in that situation,
but her rant definitely commandeered the situation for a period of time.
Bullies are quite good at that type of control.
And she was a BULLY.
Just like so many of our
Republican citizens are these days.
BHN
Scuba
(53,475 posts)... when our CFO went off on a two minute rant, veins bulging in his forehead, fist pounding on the table. I waited for him to stop, then asked in a calm voice, "Can you please repeat that Bob? I don't think I got your point."
The humiliation was shocking, complete and resulted in his resignation. People danced in the hallways.
BeHereNow
(17,162 posts)People danced in the hallways when the book burner's
daughter graduated from our school.
Problem is, there always seems to be some one to
take their place in our world.
Whether it is a parent group or a workplace, and unfortunately,
in our government.
BHN
zipplewrath
(16,698 posts)A boss loves to pontificate. Occasionally I can figure out what he is saying, and of course I have a good idea what is wrong with it. What is fascinating is to look a bit "quizzical" and say "I'm not sure I fully understand your point. Can you expand on it a bit." The number of times they can't even restate it, much less expand on it is surprising. They end up desperately looking for someone to explain their point. At that point I tend to step up and say "What I think you are getting at is...." and they say whatever the heck I want, since they will probably agree with me just to avoid looking stupid.
saras
(6,670 posts)applegrove
(131,570 posts)stirs up in them. Then they will truly know freedom.